This would have never happened under President Trump. …
The relationship between Saudi Arabia and the United States has been corroding since Democrats rigged the 2020 election and installed Joe Biden as the leader of the free world.
A bevy of recent reports has detailed how the BRICS countries are actively moving away from the U.S. dollar—effectively ending the petrodollar reserve system.
Now the Saudi Crown Prince is saying that he has ‘no interest’ in pleasing the United States. …
This development comes at the same time that OPEC announced massive oil production cuts—worrying many Americans that the price at the pump will skyrocket. …
Here’s what we currently know:
JUST IN: Saudi Prince says he no longer cares to placate the U.S…
Petrodollar COLLAPSING as we speak…
— WeLoveTrump (@WeLovePresTrump) April 4, 2023
🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince MBS says he is no longer interested in pleasing the US.
— Watcher.Guru (@WatcherGuru) April 4, 2023
Watcher Guru, a financial and blockchain news outlet, reports:
Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince recently told his associates that he is no longer interested in pleasing the U.S. In fact, according to unnamed people familiar with the conversation, he asserted that he wants “something in return” for anything he gives out to Washington.
Well, this is not the first time Prince Mohammed Bin Salman has expressed his extreme stance. In March 2022, he said that he did not care whether the U.S. President Joe Biden misunderstood things about him.
ICYMI.SAUDI ARABIA JUST TOLD US THEY ARE REDUCING PRODUCTION BY 500,000 barrels a day. More high gas prices and higher prices on all goods for the next 2.5 years, possibly forever if the American people don’t force Democrats out of power . Saudi no longer a U.S. Ally.That’s bad
— Freedom Matters! (@Freedom09383783) April 4, 2023
About sums it up:https://t.co/7ErvakWdbF
— WeLoveTrump (@WeLovePresTrump) April 4, 2023
According to Bloomberg:
Saudi officials complain that the US has become an unreliable protector.
They cite the US exit from Afghanistan in 2021 that precipitated its government’s fall and, a decade earlier, the withdrawal of support from US ally Hosni Mubarak during widespread protests that led to the Egyptian president’s downfall.
They lament what they call US “disengagement” from the Middle East, arguing that Washington has done too little to contain the expanding influence of Iran, Saudi Arabia’s rival for regional dominance.
In March, the Saudis and Iranians agreed to restore diplomatic relations, which were severed in 2016, in a deal brokered by China, to which the kingdom has grown closer.
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